Wednesday, 30 June 2010

Roadtrip USA - No Sleep 'Till Hollywood!

Updated by Paul

The wide open spaces of America awaited us and after a 22 hour train journey we could not wait to get out on the great highways of California!

A short coach journey and ride on the subway got us to San Fran airport where our companion for the next week and a half waited - the Dodge Journey 4WD SUV rental car! This Beast could certainly handle all the mountainous terrain that we were about to encounter but at only 24 miles per gallon I don’t think I’ll be recommending this to Tactical Solutions (my old company) as the new company car!

Driving on the right hand side of the road proved to be quite easy and we soon got used to jumping all the red lights (it’s allowed in America!). We headed South out of San Francisco on the Pacific Coast Highway. This road is a combination of Route 1 and Route 101. It hugs the coast pretty much the whole way and you cannot be afraid of heights when driving along the winding cliff top stretches. It does however offer the most spectacular views! If any of you remember an Irish indie band called The Thrills; virtually every song they sing about is on this stretch of road. First stop for us was Santa Cruz - you’re not that faaarrrrr!!!

At one scenic stop where we pulled over for photographs we were approached by a woman who was lost -she was looking for directions. I’m not making this next bit up by she looked at us and asked with a serious face - “do you know the way to San Jose?” Honestly - this is true.

Santa Cruz is a small surf town and although it was nice we were in town the weekend of the US Open golf tournament. This meant we probably paid over the odds for our motel room but the people were friendly as ever. We went down to the beach where a free music concert was taking place. We went all the way to Santa Cruz and saw Herman’s Hermits play live on the beach! (Kids - ask your Dad, he’ll know who they are).

Next stop on the drive was all the way down to Oxnard (just outside of Los Angeles) - eight hours in total of driving but you don’t complain when the scenery includes the Cliffs of Big Sur, The town of Santa Barbara and roads where if you are taking the cliff edge hairpin-bends at 20mph you’re driving way to fast!

We continued the next morning down to San Diego where we would stay for two nights. Along the way we stopped in Malibu for some beach-time. We looked for the home of Charlie Harper - my all time hero - but it was no where to be found.

We arrived in San Diego in time to park the trusty Dodge at the Travel-lodge and head into the Gas Lamp Quarter for some of the best Mexican burritos you can find. Chicqito’s in Park Royal has got nothing on this place!!

The next morning we headed to San Diego Zoo - very cool to see the recently born baby panda and the human-like gorillas loved the attention and mooning at the crowds. We thought we had grown out of getting excited about going to the zoo but clearly not!

We toyed with the idea of crossing the border to visit Tijuana in Mexico as it was so close but decided against it in the end and settled for a visit to san Diego Old Town which the locals told us was far more Mexican than Tijuana could ever be. After some more great food and watching the festival dancing we headed back for a night to recover ready for a drive through Death
Valley the next day!

The wide open space of Death valley was astounding - never driven on a road that just endlessly goes on like this one! We arrived late afternoon and just headed straight on the road (there is no other direction you can go). We stopped off at a scenic point in time to capture the sun-set over the desert mountains - very nice and romantic! One problem though - after sunset it gets dark! We can now tell you from experience that death valley is not the place to be in the darkness. After the car made a 10,000ft climb we then had to get down the mountain on the other side - not easy on hairpin bends and cliff edges in the pitch back. No wonder we didn’t see another vehicle for nearly three hours- no other idiot is foolish enough to attempt this drive in the dark!

After a night spent in a motel in Bishop we headed out to Yosemite National Park early the next morning. After the searing heat of Death Valley it was nice to climb into the mountains via a scenic drive around June lake and see snow on the ground. Where else in the world can you go from 42 degree heat one day to snowball fights the next?!

The scenery in Yosemite is truly breathtaking but beware - you better keep your eye’s on the road or you WILL hit a bear!

We arrived late into a town called Sonora - a place in California’s ‘gold rush country’. This was the town where 19th century pioneers headed out to the hills to make a claim mining for their fortunes in gold. After a nights sleep we took a 10 minute drive (as opposed to the 10 hours driving the previous few days!) into Columbia Town where all the buildings are preserved from the gold-rush era and the town-folk work in 19th century costumes. Bit of a tourist trap but good fun. We went panning for gold but didn’t strike it rich so still gonna have to find some work in Australia to fund the rest of the trip. Damn!

We stayed out drinking late in a nice bar where we met some Mexicans. Good people but they insisted that European football was rubbish, too slow and the players too stiff and a European team would never win the world cup again! As this blog is being written after the world cup has finished I can now laugh and say ha! The top three teams were European. However they were clearly right about the overpaid, over-rated England idiots.

The next day we drove back to San Francisco to drop the car back and catch the greyhound bus down to Los Angeles. Some time to kill in the afternoon though meant we could go to the Imax cinema and watch Toy Story 3 in full on 3D. Definitely our new favourite film of the year - tipping this for an Oscar!

After an eventful greyhound journey (never getting on one of these buses again) we arrived in Downtown L.A. around 6.30am. Didn’t fancy hanging around here for too long so jumped in a cab to our motel in Alhambra. It wasn’t too bad so we dumped our luggage and despite no sleep for at least 36 hours we headed out for the thrills, spills and rollercoaster excitement of Universal Studios!

After 8 hours of wrestling with King-Kong, evading Jurassic Dinosaurs and hanging with one Homer J. Simpson we headed back to finally get some shut-eye before a 6am start the next morning to head out to Vegas!

After misreading the timetable the day before and not realising it was a Sunday we nearly missed the bus! A phone call to hold the bus at the next stop and taxi-ride got us there eventually otherwise we would have missed Vegas. Disaster averted!!

The first thing that strikes you about Vegas is the sheer size of it. The hotels and Casino’s are clearly big but the distance between them stops you from hoping from one to another. Clearly a cunning ploy to keep you in them for as long as possible particularly when the heat outside is constantly over 40 degrees! We stayed in the Imperial Palace which was a decent hotel and good casino but wanted to venture out - particularly up to the old town to see the Freemont experience. We got the Monorail up to the end of the strip and walked the rest - past lots of little white chapels but resisted the urge to go in! There was one place that claimed to be the venue where Joan Collins and Michael Jordan got married - a strange wedding if ever there was one!!The Freemont experience is right the way along Freemont street and consists of a giant LCD screen over the street projecting images of rock concerts as well as interviews with the crowd. The atmosphere was good with live bands playing and the party was definitely fuelled by one dollar Margaritas and a dollar fifty for bottles of Corona! After a small bit of gambling it was off to bed - nope no big winnings to pay for the rest of the trip either.

The next morning we set off towards The Grand Canyon stopping off for brunch at an all you can eat Chinese Restaurant for only $10. We ate a lot! We arrived at our overnight accommodation around 3pm - the Hualapai cowboy ranch on the western rim of the grand Canyon. To say the views were amazing would be an understatement - can you get much better in the word than waking up in the morning to see the sunrise over one of the seven wonders of the world?!
After a short journey along the canyon, peering over the edge a few times and watching a Native American dance performance we headed back to the ranch for a campfire and sing-song. Off to bed then with some great memories and in good time to get up at 5am for that sunrise!

The next day we headed back to Los Angeles arriving late afternoon. After a drop off downtown in Chinatown we headed out on the subway to our hostel in Hollywood on Sunset Boulevard. We arrived in time to catch a burger in a diner with a jukebox at you table - each song only 5 cents!

On the morning of our final day in the USA we jumped on one of the Hollywood tours. First up was a quick journey up the hills for the obligatory tourist photo under the Hollywood sign. We then headed down to Hollywood Boulevard for a stop at Mann’s Chinese Theatre and the Walk of Fame. After yet more photos we headed up to Beverley Hills and Bel Air for a tour around the homes of the rich and famous. Except you don’t actually see the homes. A few high fences, some hedges and the occasional mail box are pretty much all that marks out the home of someone you might know. Saying that though, Jennifer Aniston certainly has a swanky mailbox!

Anna, and the other Scandinavian girls we were touring with did get extremely excited about being so close to the film stars but not as excited as a shopping trip down Rodeo Drive! Getting close up with a Bugatti Veyron parked up on the street was a high point and goes to show there still some money to be made in Tinsel Town!
Back to pick up our luggage then head to LAX airport. 4 weeks in North America coming to an end. Five states of the US covered as well as Brtish Columbia in Canada. Travelled by plane, train and automobile (as well as bike, boat, coach and bus!) Time for a break from all this stressful travelling. Where’s next? Ahhh…… Fiji!!!



Saturday, 19 June 2010

Sleepless In Seattle

Updated by Paul

Seattle - The home of Starbucks, Microsoft and Frasier Crane - now home to Anna Barenfeld and Paul Clifford for the next few days!

Back in the early 90’s grunge music was formed in Seattle; a musical genre based around misery, moaning and wallowing in your own self pity. You would be forgiven therefore for thinking that the city would not hold too many charms for the visiting tourist but you would be sorely wrong! The people here are charming, amiable and downright friendly. It almost make me think the whole grunge thing was an ironic joke to the rest of the world. Except we all know Americans don’t do irony!

After arriving on the Amtrak Cascade service from Vancouver we took the free bus (all buses in Seattle are free!) to our hotel - a nice place with an art theme running through each room - You think we might get a room with nice Van Gogh or Leonardo works? No we got the room that looked like a graffiti’ed London Tube Station!

The Seattle Space Needle stands at 520ft high and dominates the Seattle skyline (remember the opening credits from Frasier?!) We had a good view of this from our hotel but felt like we had to go higher to see the real spectaculars. The price for a ride up to the top of the needle is $18 each. Thankfully we spoke to the friendly receptionist At the hotel who told us about the Columbia Centre - a downtown office block that stands at 1,050ft high - twice that of the space needle! The best part? It only costs $3 each to get to the top - rock on!!

The world famous Pike Place Public Market in Seattle was our next stop. This is the place where the cheeriest fishmongers in the world sing songs and throw fish to each other across huge distances whilst the public look on in amazement. We would have bought a side of Salmon but it probably would not have kept well in the backpack for a week!

This market is also where the first ever Starbucks coffee store opened and its still trading. The queue was too long (even longer than the Starbucks in Ealing Broadway!) so we decided to get our caffeine fix at a place cheekily called “Seattle’s Best Coffee Company” - having tasted a great up there they’re probably not wrong!

At the end of the day hunger got the better of us and we decided to head to a Moroccan restaurant so authentic you had to sit on the floor, eat with your fingers and wear a Fez. I felt like Tommy Cooper. Just like that!

The next morning we went for a tour of Seattle’s underground city. This came into existence over a hundred years ago when the town’s planners realised that hadn’t built the city high enough to cope with the population’s sewage needs so they built over the existing streets. Now a whole different world exists underground. I’m sure the guides who host this tour are part-time comedians because they will constantly take the p**s out of you and tease you about where you come from. At least we have bragging rights over the yanks for being better at football, right??

Our brief tour of Seattle had to come to an end on day three and we boarded the Amtrak Coast Starlight train service for a 22 hour train journey back down to California. This is where we could catch up on the lost sleep after being sleepless in Seattle.




To view pictures click the link below:

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=25783&id=100000021481670&l=a69b6882b5

Wednesday, 16 June 2010

Canada - eh?!

Updated by Paul




Arrived in Vancouver to find our hostel tucked away somewhere nice and peaceful just behind the red light district. You know you’re always in an interesting part of town when you need to ask a hooker for directions!

After a quick dinner and drink we headed to bed for an early start tomorrow - heading up the Sea to Sky highway to Whistler mountain.

After a scenic stop to go and chase some waterfalls (despite advice to the contrary from TLC) and lunch by a lake (a Lumberjack sandwich!) we arrived at Whistler in time to plan some hiking, biking and climbing. First on the agenda for me was a ride up the Peak-2-Peak gondola across two mountains - great views and spotted two bears running up the side of the mountain. The snow at the top of the mountain was great fun - building snowmen in June is a new experience! Anna stayed down in the village to have a drink and wander around.

We headed out to the lakes by the hostel where the rest of our group was staying for a campfire singsong and barbeque. As much as we would have loved to stay there the night, we had a luxury ski lodge waiting for us back in the village - who said backpacking around the world had to be roughing it?! The rooftop hot-tub was soon to become my new favourite place in the world!

The next morning saw us go our separate ways - I’d somehow managed to sign up to go Zip-lining through the mountain forests, off the top of Giant Redwoods, 200ft in the air - whilst Anna went for a gentle hike across Garibaldi Park! The zipline was fun and by the end of it I was going off the platforms upside down. Anna on the other hand turned her stroll in the park into a close encounter with a bear just 10ft away. See the pictures of this by clicking the link below.

We originally planned to be in Whistler for 2 days but extended it to 5 as it just seemed so much nicer than Vancouver. All the Ski tracks used in the winter for the Olympic games were turned into bike tracks for the summer - this suited us just fine - possibly the first time I’ve ridden a Mountain bike actually on a Mountain!

Back in Vancouver we decided to eat out and grab a few drinks in the historic Gas Town quarter of the city. Discovered a restaurant called The Spaghetti Factory - four courses plus unlimited drinks for only 12 dollars - the place was packed! Here’s a business idea that needs to be exploited back in the UK!

After a day spent cycling around Stanley Park we decided to go to play some pitch and putt. Turned up to find that 40 Japanese tourists had just got there before us and were waiting on the first tee! I don’t think the maximum 4 players per group rule was in force here!

After another night spent in Vancouver it was time to head to the station and catch the Amtrak train down to Seattle. My advice to anyone thinking about going to the West Coast of Canada? Spend as little time in Vancouver as possible and get out to Whistler ASAP!


As they say in Canada - You’ll have a great time - eh?!


To See Photo's click the link below:
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Friday, 11 June 2010

I Left My Heart..... In San Francisco!

Updated By Paul




Ten hours of flying still doesn't prepare you for this city!



Day 1 - A short shuttle journey from the airport to our hotel - The Mosser - a hotel with its own recording studio! Was tempted to lay down a track but the jet lag kicked in in time to knock me out cold after a quick beer in the Fourth Street bar. Some strange game was on the TV - big lads chucking orange balls into baskets - looked a bit like Netball! Roll on the world cup when we teach these yanks how to play a real sport. I refuse to call it Soccer though!


Day 2 - Jesus Christ, waking up at 5.30am - we're supposed to be on holiday here! After a quick jaunt round the Museum of Modern Art we jumped on a boat round the bay. Cold, Foggy, Wet - this ain't the California the Beach Boys Sung about.


Sailed round the Golden Gate Bridge and sighted Alcatraz. thinking of planning a jail break from there for tomorrow. What??! - gotta pay $26 dollars each for the privilage? I bet Clint Eastwood never had that problem....


Day 3 - Up at 5am again - damn you jet lag. Off to the Golden Gate Park on the tram system. We cut through San Fran's China Town - A place so massive it made London's China Town look like the China Kitchen restaurant in Greenford Avenue!!

Still have not figured out whether this is the most friendly country in the world or the most annoying. I sneezed on the tram and someone shouted out "bless you" from half way down the carriage. Of course this meant I had to shout back "thank-you" - how inconsiderate of that person!! Just wouldn't happen in London.

Academy of science was fun - where else in the world other than America can you visit an indoor rainforest littered with hotdog stands?


Caught the boat to Alcatraz - took the tour round the cell block. Didn't think much of the decor - don't think I'll give the estate agent a call back about this one! Was interesting though to see where Al Capone and others were locked up in solitary isolation along with the blood and grenade marks from previous jail breaks. Was tempted to make the swim back to the mainland but the wind was against us today!



Caught a cable car back from Fisherman's Wharf to downtown. These things are lethal.. 90 degree hills (well nearly) and these old victorian things hurtling down them in between the traffic. Great stuff - didn't stop me hanging out the side though snapping away on the camera.... better than the big dipper at Blackpool anyday!


Day 4 - Now this is what I've been waiting for - Wine tasting around Sonoma and Napa....!! Picked up at 8.30am - never too early to start boozing!! Our tour guide had other ideas though and insisted we do the nature visit first around Muir woods first. Boooo!!


To be fair, the giant redwoods were "awesome" - damn I'm even talking like a yank now!!


Drank more wine than was good for us but enjoyed every bit of it. Still desperate for a beer when back at the hotel later on though. Spent 25 dollars on a nice bottle from the Jacuzzi vineyard - yep run by the same family that invented the hot tub. expecting this to be a nice bottle of bubbly!!!


Drove back over the Golden Gate Bridge, a rare clear day in the bay. Probably added another 50 photo's to the world's most photograped bridge.


Off to bed slightly sozzled - off to Vancouver, Canada next. Its got a lot to live up to after San Fran!!
See photo's by clicking the link below:

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Two Day Countdown.....

Only two days until departure now.....!

The route we're taking is as follows:

London to USA (San Francisco) - Flight
USA to Canada (Vancouver) - Flight
Vancouver to Los Angeles - Overland
Los Angeles to Fiji - Flight
Fiji to New Zealand (Auckland) - Flight
New Zealand (Christchurch) to Australia (Sydney) - Flight
Australia (Cairns) to Singapore - Flight
Singapore to Thailand - Overland through Malaysia
Thailand (Bangkok) to Laos to Vietnam to Cambodia back to Thailand - Overland
Thailand to China (Beijing) - Flight
Beijing to London - Flight

Updates and photos will be shared on this blog and it will be great to hear updates and comments from everyone about life back home. Keep any news about QPR positive though and only tell me about a successful promotion campaign! I don't think I could cope with the details on another battling relegation season!

Thanks everyone and speak to you all soon.